GriffJon.com Blog

« Worst. Tech Support. Evar. | Main | Your Copyright > My Security? »

suBtle hacks

March 17, 2006 ( Development )

I enjoy activities that put the 'b" in subtle. This Greasemonkey script for FireFox translates dollar figures in webpages you view into Oil Barrels:

Oil Standard is a Greasemonkey plug-in for Firefox that translates prices from dollars to barrels of oil equivalent, based on current spot prices; this means that the oil equivalent price fluctuates daily. "Networked Performance" art website Turbulence created the script, which works exactly as promised. Hit any web page that shows prices in dollars -- Amazon.com, the New York Times stock pages, even your bank account info -- and Oil Standard will show you how many barrels of oil it would take to match that amount of money.

I think that's ingenious. But I think there's room for improvement and expansion. I think there are tons of further currencies to look into, based on this idea. Easily (temptation to dive into this and hack it out.... increasing), you could not just the oil barrel cost, but the number of terrorist agency recruitments and/or the human loss of life per barrel of oil, calculated on per-annum rates in Iraq, Nigeria, etc. conflicts ... e.g. This iPod costs 6.4 barrels of oil, which translates into .5 terrorist recruitments and the loss of one human life.

Looking at CheapGas would certainly be interesting, to say the least.

With significantly more difficulty in calculation, you could also try to expose other externalities, such as:

*Environ impact of materials
*Free trade impact of labor costs
*Sweatshop labor hours

One of the biggest problems in development is having people understand the impact of their decisions and the policies of their government in the first world/OECD nations. Most American citizens guess that the US spends up to 15% of its budget on foreign aid -- the reality is that it's less than 1%, so it's no surprise when they then presume that it's not doing any good and should be cut back.

This plugin is a good example of how the geekier development professionals can use ICTs as information sharing, and teaching tools to engender support on the home front for development projects abroad.

Posted by griffjon at March 17, 2006 05:40 PM

Trackback Pings

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.GriffJon.com/journal/MT/mt-trackback.cgi/214

Comments

Post a comment

Thanks for signing in, . Now you can comment. (sign out)

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)


Remember me?



Stylin'

Normal (Bloggish)
Default
Fire (FireFox Showcase)
GriffJon.com (Pages past)
GriffJon.com (Tribute to Dragon Warrior)
Printer-Friendly High-contrast

Calendar

October 2006
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30 31        

Contact Me

email: (my name)  (`at')   G r i f f  J o n (`.dot')c o m
PGPPGP Key
efax:1.925.666.3613
IM
ICQ:16386214
Y!

MSN

AIM

GriffJon

Web
/.#14945
LJ:LiveJournal
Flikr:Photos

Disclaimer

My personal opinions do not necesarily reflect on my employers, schools, any government, U n i t e d   S t a t e s   P e a c e   C o r p s, my friends, or my family.

They may not even reflect my current opinions

Furthermore, these opinions do not unfairly influence any official decisions I make in my academic or professional work.

If you wish permission to reprint or reuse anything within these pages, I require that you contact me for permission. I'll likely give it to you, and probably even a link back.

Software, scripts, and configuration files downloaded from this website come with NO WARRANTY express or implied, and are for use AT YOUR OWN RISK. They are available under the GPL unless otherwise noted.